When Jeremy Wade dives to murky depths hunting a slithery predator, he immediately realizes he could instantly become the hunted. See him come face-to-face with a massive, terrifying anaconda. | For more River Monsters visit http://animal.discovery.com/tv-shows/river-monsters/#mkcpgn=ytapl1
Catch new episodes of River Monsters Sundays at 9pm E|P on Animal Planet!
Subscribe to Animal Planet! | http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=animalplanettv
Get full episodes! | http://bit.ly/RiverMonstersFullEps
Join us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/RiverMonsters
https://www.facebook.com/AnimalPlanet
Follow Animal Planet on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/AnimalPlanet
Check out the Animalist App! | http://anmlst.co/1dILpRb

published:27 May 2014

views:3716261

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

published:05 Jul 2014

views:198

Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI with Low Key Watersports.
I want to note hear what a fantastic job Low Key did for us on these dives. I would highly recommend this outfit for your diving plans and or other watersporrt activities.
On this dive we saw a huge Ray, a Giant Grouper.

The Biggest Snake in the World recorded, seen, or filmed is analyzed in depth and confirmed to be around 195 feet in length and could easily eat a man.
IN DEPTH ANALYSIS AND CONFIRMATION
A monstrous snake nearly the size of a football field is captured on film as it rears back to attack a helicopter flying by, but could anything that big really exist? Follow my in depth analysis and by the end of this video try asking yourself that question again.
Humanity is familiar with some pretty big snakes, both in person and in the fossil records, and sometimes through photographic evidence by reliable witnesses.
During World War Two, Belgian fighter ace and squadron leader Remy Van Lierd rose to the rank of Colonel in the British Royal Air Force, and received the Distinguished Flying Cross medal of valor, after shooting down six enemy aircraft and forty four V-1Flying Bombs. After the war he was put in command of the Kamina Air Base, in the Katanga region of what was then The Belgian Congo.
His reputation and spatial recognition abilities are impeccable, which means we must give careful consideration to this incredible report.
One day in Africa in 1959, on the way back to the airbase from a helicopter mission, Colonel Lierd was astounded to see a massive snake winding it's way along the terrain below.
He circled around for a better look and had one of his flight crew take a series of photographs. As he descended to about 500 feet altitude, the gigantic snake took notice, and reared back as though ready to strike at the helicopter if it dared to come within range.
By his own estimate, Colonel Lierd guesses that the snake must have been a minimum of 50 feet in length, with a triangular shaped jaw about two to three feet wide. In his own words, “It could have easily eaten up a man!”
Keep in mind that a reticulated python is the longest snake ever measured alive at 33 feet or 10 meters in length. T he longest measured known extinct snake is the Titanaboa, which was 42 ft or about 13 meters in length.
After “countless reports from the Kamina area of giant snakes”, the original photos were sent to CIACaptainLorenzoW. Burrows, director of the National Photographic Interpretation Center with some further analysis of the photo. Let’s look at that.
Here is the full photo in it’s entirety.
As you can see at the bottom, the type of camera the photo was taken with was recorded, which adds some authenticity to this photo.
The key factor in this photo, as pointed out in the letter, are the termite nests, which is a little confusing at first unless you know what an African termite nest looks like.
They look like this…they’re absolutely huge and they take on recognizable shapes.
The letter reads “Further, the two black spots in the upper left hand quadrant are quite plainly termite nests, or rather, their shadows.
Under high power you can very easily see this, and that the top one is a column, circular in the horizontal section, while the bottom one is typical of the flange types that always point north to south.”
See the termite nests? Now remember how big they are?
Let’s use them, as is done in the letter, to approximate a scale of reference. These termite mounds can easily be 2 and a half times the size of a human. So, we’ll say the top termite nest is 15 feet or about 4.5 meters tall.
This is a bit of a guess, but if the snake was fully stretched out, I’d say it’d be around this long.
So if we just stack our 15 foot or 4.5 meter termite nests next to this line…we get about 13 of them.
This yields a rough approximate total length of about 195 feet or about 60 meters and closely matches what the letter says of about 200 feet.
That’s up to 5 times larger than even the Titanaboa…allegedly the biggest snake ever and that was thought to have gone extinct shortly after the dinosaurs.
What sort of monster did Colonel Remy Van Lierd encounter and photograph here?...and why are there so many other alleged reports of massive snakes by others in the same area?
The Congo seems like a very, very scary place.
Crave more mysteries? Watch our Top 5 BIGGEST AnimalMysteries EVER video if you havn’t already or jump on our mystery playlist and discover how aliens may have saved Earth from a nuclear catastrophe….twice.
CC:
Alpha
Ghedoghedo
RyanQuick

Human Planet joins Sam Niang, a Laotian fisherman, as he walks a high wire strung above the raging Mekong River rapids on an extraordinary commute to work.
Rivers provide the essentials of life: fresh food and water. They often provide natural highways and enable us to live in just about every environment on Earth. But rivers can also flood, freeze or disappear altogether!
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
JohnHurts narrated the visually stunning Human Planet, an awe-inspiring, jaw-dropping, heart-stopping landmark series that marvels at mankind's incredible relationship with nature in the world today.
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

published:25 Sep 2013

views:1706540

published:18 Dec 2009

views:1146

Broadcast: 10 April 2011 on Sunday Night, Seven Network, Australia.
They are the largest animals our planet has ever known, their tongues alone weigh more than an elephant, their hearts are the size of a car. Despite all that, we really know very little about the magnificent blue whales. Man has almost hunted them to extinction, but ironically it was Sri Lanka's bitter civil war that gave them sanctuary. Only now that the war is over is the world seeing one of the greatest blue whale colonies ever discovered. Tim was right there alongside these giants.
CREW:
Reporter: Tim Noonan
Producer: Dale Paget
Camera: Jason Wotherspoon
Editor: Jeremy Maher
SUBSCRIBE:
Youtube ► http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=timnoonantv
SOCIALS:
Facebook ► http://facebook.com/timnoonantv
Instagram ► http://instagram.com/timnoonantv
Website ► http://www.timnoonan.tv

River Monsters

River Monsters is a British and Americanwildlife documentary television programme produced for Animal Planet by Icon Films of Bristol, United Kingdom. Hosted by extreme angler and biologistJeremy Wade who travels around the globe in search of the most fearsome freshwater killers. Looking for clues, eyewitnesses and stories about people who were dragged underwater by these vicious predators, he tries to catch the biggest specimens and then release them back to the wild. His aim is to save these rare creatures from extinction and to help people understand the truth behind the horrific attacks on humans.

River Monsters became one of the most watched, most successful programmes in Animal Planet's history, and one of the most viewed series on Discovery Channel too. In the US, only the shortened version is shown and some animals Jeremy shows are just cut off. These missing scenes are shown only when it premieres on ITV (originally on on Sundays ITV1) in the UK.

Human Planet

Human Planet is an 8-part British television documentary series. It is produced by the BBC with co-production from Discovery and BBC Worldwide. It describes the human species and its relationship with the natural world by showing the remarkable ways humans have adapted to life in every environment on Earth.

Announced in 2007, the production teams based at the BBC Natural History Unit in Bristol and BBC Wales spent three years shooting over 70 stories in some of the most remote locations on Earth spanning about 40 countries. Each episode of the series focuses on a different human-inhabited environment, including deserts, jungles, the Arctic, grasslands, rivers, mountains, oceans, and the urban landscape.

For the first time on a BBC landmark series the production had a dedicated stills photographer, Timothy Allen, who documented the project photographically for the books and multimedia that accompany the series.

Human Planet was originally screened in the UK on BBC One each Thursday at 8pm over eight weeks, starting from 13 January 2011. Domestic repeats have been seen on Eden, with all 8 episodes aired over one week in April 2012. BBC Worldwide has since announced they have sold the broadcast rights to 22 international markets.

Face-to-Face with a 20-Foot, Monster Anaconda | River Monsters

When Jeremy Wade dives to murky depths hunting a slithery predator, he immediately realizes he could instantly become the hunted. See him come face-to-face with a massive, terrifying anaconda. | For more River Monsters visit http://animal.discovery.com/tv-shows/river-monsters/#mkcpgn=ytapl1
Catch new episodes of River Monsters Sundays at 9pm E|P on Animal Planet!
Subscribe to Animal Planet! | http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=animalplanettv
Get full episodes! | http://bit.ly/RiverMonstersFullEps
Join us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/RiverMonsters
https://www.facebook.com/AnimalPlanet
Follow Animal Planet on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/AnimalPlanet
Check out the Animalist App! | http://anmlst.co/1dILpRb

44:17

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

8:21

Scuba Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI

Scuba Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI

Scuba Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI

Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI with Low Key Watersports.
I want to note hear what a fantastic job Low Key did for us on these dives. I would highly recommend this outfit for your diving plans and or other watersporrt activities.
On this dive we saw a huge Ray, a Giant Grouper.

Crazy guy jumps into the Congo river.AVI

BIGGEST Snake EVER (195 Ft.) Analyzed & Confirmed

The Biggest Snake in the World recorded, seen, or filmed is analyzed in depth and confirmed to be around 195 feet in length and could easily eat a man.
IN DEPTH ANALYSIS AND CONFIRMATION
A monstrous snake nearly the size of a football field is captured on film as it rears back to attack a helicopter flying by, but could anything that big really exist? Follow my in depth analysis and by the end of this video try asking yourself that question again.
Humanity is familiar with some pretty big snakes, both in person and in the fossil records, and sometimes through photographic evidence by reliable witnesses.
During World War Two, Belgian fighter ace and squadron leader Remy Van Lierd rose to the rank of Colonel in the British Royal Air Force, and received the Distinguished Flying Cross medal of valor, after shooting down six enemy aircraft and forty four V-1Flying Bombs. After the war he was put in command of the Kamina Air Base, in the Katanga region of what was then The Belgian Congo.
His reputation and spatial recognition abilities are impeccable, which means we must give careful consideration to this incredible report.
One day in Africa in 1959, on the way back to the airbase from a helicopter mission, Colonel Lierd was astounded to see a massive snake winding it's way along the terrain below.
He circled around for a better look and had one of his flight crew take a series of photographs. As he descended to about 500 feet altitude, the gigantic snake took notice, and reared back as though ready to strike at the helicopter if it dared to come within range.
By his own estimate, Colonel Lierd guesses that the snake must have been a minimum of 50 feet in length, with a triangular shaped jaw about two to three feet wide. In his own words, “It could have easily eaten up a man!”
Keep in mind that a reticulated python is the longest snake ever measured alive at 33 feet or 10 meters in length. T he longest measured known extinct snake is the Titanaboa, which was 42 ft or about 13 meters in length.
After “countless reports from the Kamina area of giant snakes”, the original photos were sent to CIACaptainLorenzoW. Burrows, director of the National Photographic Interpretation Center with some further analysis of the photo. Let’s look at that.
Here is the full photo in it’s entirety.
As you can see at the bottom, the type of camera the photo was taken with was recorded, which adds some authenticity to this photo.
The key factor in this photo, as pointed out in the letter, are the termite nests, which is a little confusing at first unless you know what an African termite nest looks like.
They look like this…they’re absolutely huge and they take on recognizable shapes.
The letter reads “Further, the two black spots in the upper left hand quadrant are quite plainly termite nests, or rather, their shadows.
Under high power you can very easily see this, and that the top one is a column, circular in the horizontal section, while the bottom one is typical of the flange types that always point north to south.”
See the termite nests? Now remember how big they are?
Let’s use them, as is done in the letter, to approximate a scale of reference. These termite mounds can easily be 2 and a half times the size of a human. So, we’ll say the top termite nest is 15 feet or about 4.5 meters tall.
This is a bit of a guess, but if the snake was fully stretched out, I’d say it’d be around this long.
So if we just stack our 15 foot or 4.5 meter termite nests next to this line…we get about 13 of them.
This yields a rough approximate total length of about 195 feet or about 60 meters and closely matches what the letter says of about 200 feet.
That’s up to 5 times larger than even the Titanaboa…allegedly the biggest snake ever and that was thought to have gone extinct shortly after the dinosaurs.
What sort of monster did Colonel Remy Van Lierd encounter and photograph here?...and why are there so many other alleged reports of massive snakes by others in the same area?
The Congo seems like a very, very scary place.
Crave more mysteries? Watch our Top 5 BIGGEST AnimalMysteries EVER video if you havn’t already or jump on our mystery playlist and discover how aliens may have saved Earth from a nuclear catastrophe….twice.
CC:
Alpha
Ghedoghedo
RyanQuick

Eric Moussambani OLYMPIC 2000 SYDNEY SWIMMING (HIGH QUALITY)

World's Most Extreme Fisherman - Human Planet - BBC

Human Planet joins Sam Niang, a Laotian fisherman, as he walks a high wire strung above the raging Mekong River rapids on an extraordinary commute to work.
Rivers provide the essentials of life: fresh food and water. They often provide natural highways and enable us to live in just about every environment on Earth. But rivers can also flood, freeze or disappear altogether!
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
JohnHurts narrated the visually stunning Human Planet, an awe-inspiring, jaw-dropping, heart-stopping landmark series that marvels at mankind's incredible relationship with nature in the world today.
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

6:00

Phetsta - Congo

Phetsta - Congo

Phetsta - Congo

10:53

Diving with Blue Whales | Sri Lanka

Diving with Blue Whales | Sri Lanka

Diving with Blue Whales | Sri Lanka

Broadcast: 10 April 2011 on Sunday Night, Seven Network, Australia.
They are the largest animals our planet has ever known, their tongues alone weigh more than an elephant, their hearts are the size of a car. Despite all that, we really know very little about the magnificent blue whales. Man has almost hunted them to extinction, but ironically it was Sri Lanka's bitter civil war that gave them sanctuary. Only now that the war is over is the world seeing one of the greatest blue whale colonies ever discovered. Tim was right there alongside these giants.
CREW:
Reporter: Tim Noonan
Producer: Dale Paget
Camera: Jason Wotherspoon
Editor: Jeremy Maher
SUBSCRIBE:
Youtube ► http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=timnoonantv
SOCIALS:
Facebook ► http://facebook.com/timnoonantv
Instagram ► http://instagram.com/timnoonantv
Website ► http://www.timnoonan.tv

55:35

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlighting how we abuse the drinking water beneath our feet.

5:16

A Day in the Life of a Welder in the Congo

A Day in the Life of a Welder in the Congo

A Day in the Life of a Welder in the Congo

CBN gets a look into the life of Mbuta, a welder who grew up an orphan in the Congo.

Sewer diving as a dream job in Mexico - vpro Metropolis

In a regular sewer people leave their ‘normal business’, but in Mexico City not so much. Sometimes things like refrigerators, cars and ever dead cows are dumped in the sewer there, which makes the sewer clogged. Fortunately Don Julio is there to save the city from its own poo, as he is the city’s one and only sewer diver. ‘People think I'm crazy, but I love my job. It’s so nice, that filthy water.’
vpro Metropolis was a video project by Dutch broadcast organisation vpro, that ran from 2008 to 2015. Metropolis is made by a global collective of young filmmakers and TV producers, reporting on remarkable stories from their own country/city. We made a trip around the globe on one single issue: from local beauty ideals to Elvis impersonators, to what's it like being gay, or an outcast or a dog in different cultures.
More videos and full episodes: www.metropolisweb.tv
Visit additional youtube channels bij vpro broadcast:
vpro Broadcast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC75PWWQrls0z6fh0loY5I4Q
vpro Metropolis: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpnazGScKQfGauk7YNyI21w
vpro Documentary: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9sXw4ZdPEIp6bYGvLW-_iA
vpro WorldStories: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqJ6GC0klkbFuQa-0ZePqkQ
vpro Extra: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTLrhK07g6LP-JtT0VVE56A
vpro VG (world music): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-KX3q7zIz7s2rjooBfl6Nw
vpro 3voor12 (alternative music): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-p9faJQsBObRNiKY8QF2NQ
vpro 3voor12 extra (music stories): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtgVYRLGraeL9rGMiM3rBHA

27:48

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push themselves to the limit to break new records but despite the serious risks involved, they can’t resist the call of the deep.
SUBSCRIBE TO RTDChannel to get documentaries firsthand! http://bit.ly/1MgFbVy
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Listen to us on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/rttv
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.

195FT SNAKE CAUGHT ON CAMERA - real or fake

In this video we're taking a look at the famous snake that was caught on camera by a decorated military fighter pilot. We uncover new and exclusive info! Also, we have answers to the notorious picture of a little girl with what looks like a spaceman photobombing her. A rice paddy growing 3D art, and one of the strangest little ocean creatures you will ever see!
PEOPLE WHO SUBMITTED THE SNAKE STORY
John MurphyTanvir AhmedNayeem
minhaj kishor
Josip Ćurić
Intyas Ikhsan
Minhajul IslamRavinIbrahimCristian Rodriguez
Valeriano Ricaplaza
Speedy Gonzalez
MORE DESCRIPTION OF GIANT SNAKE STORY
Hey guys Bill here… you know, tall tales about gigantic snakes have been around literally forever.
But the largest snake we have actual physical evidence for is the Titanoboa, an extinct species of boa constrictor that lived 58 to 60 million years ago. This giant snake reached a length of 42 feet, or 12.8 meters, and probably weighed 2500 pounds, or 1,135 kilograms.
The biggest snakes alive today are the Anaconda from South America and Reticulated Python from Southeast Asia.
The largest anaconda ever measured was almost 28 feet, or about 8 and a half meters long. She wasn't weighed at the time she was caught, but scientists estimate she must have weighed over 500 lbs, or 227 kilograms.
Although the Anaconda is the largest snake in terms of body mass, the Asiatic Reticulated Python holds the world record for the length of a snake. The longest one ever measured came in at about 33 feet, or just over 10 meters.
Coming face to face with a 30-foot anaconda or reticulated python would have to be one of the scariest things you could possibly imagine. But what about a snake over SIX TIMES that size?? That is exactly what Belgian ace pilot Remy Van Lierde may have experienced when he shot this mysterious photo while helicoptering over the Congol ese jungle in 1959.
METADATA
Some helpful words for finding this video later. I use this when I get a submission for a topic that I have already covered but forgotten which video it is in.
Solway Firth Spaceman.
rice paddy
Naruto
pygmy seahorse
spaceman photobombs girl
congo snake
195 FootSnakeKaren Dewhirst
Creative Discovery Museum

4:24

World Vision travels to The Democratic Republic of Congo part 2

World Vision travels to The Democratic Republic of Congo part 2

World Vision travels to The Democratic Republic of Congo part 2

Esperance
"My Husband was Shot in the Head"
Dave Toycen, president of World Vision Canada, travelled to eastern Congo where he met families struggling to thrive in devastating conditions, following a brutal war. One such family shared their story with him and how they overcame tragedy.

Record Cave Dive Leaves Mystery | National Geographic

May 3, 2011 — An Australian team has made a record-breaking dive in what may be the world's deepest coldwater cave. But the explorers still haven't reached the end of this New Zealand cave, thought to lead to the mysterious source of the Pearse River.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
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RecordCaveDiveLeavesMystery | National Geographic
https://youtu.be/Om1P8dE6zm4
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

Face-to-Face with a 20-Foot, Monster Anaconda | River Monsters

When Jeremy Wade dives to murky depths hunting a slithery predator, he immediately realizes he could instantly become the hunted. See him come face-to-face with a massive, terrifying anaconda. | For more River Monsters visit http://animal.discovery.com/tv-shows/river-monsters/#mkcpgn=ytapl1
Catch new episodes of River Monsters Sundays at 9pm E|P on Animal Planet!
Subscribe to Animal Planet! | http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=animalplanettv
Get full episodes! | http://bit.ly/RiverMonstersFullEps
Join us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/RiverMonsters
https://www.facebook.com/AnimalPlanet
Follow Animal Planet on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/AnimalPlanet
Check out the Animalist App! | http://anmlst.co/1dILpRb

published: 27 May 2014

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

published: 05 Jul 2014

Scuba Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI

Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI with Low Key Watersports.
I want to note hear what a fantastic job Low Key did for us on these dives. I would highly recommend this outfit for your diving plans and or other watersporrt activities.
On this dive we saw a huge Ray, a Giant Grouper.

published: 07 Nov 2012

Crazy guy jumps into the Congo river.AVI

BIGGEST Snake EVER (195 Ft.) Analyzed & Confirmed

The Biggest Snake in the World recorded, seen, or filmed is analyzed in depth and confirmed to be around 195 feet in length and could easily eat a man.
IN DEPTH ANALYSIS AND CONFIRMATION
A monstrous snake nearly the size of a football field is captured on film as it rears back to attack a helicopter flying by, but could anything that big really exist? Follow my in depth analysis and by the end of this video try asking yourself that question again.
Humanity is familiar with some pretty big snakes, both in person and in the fossil records, and sometimes through photographic evidence by reliable witnesses.
During World War Two, Belgian fighter ace and squadron leader Remy Van Lierd rose to the rank of Colonel in the British Royal Air Force, and received the Distinguished Flying Cross med...

Eric Moussambani OLYMPIC 2000 SYDNEY SWIMMING (HIGH QUALITY)

World's Most Extreme Fisherman - Human Planet - BBC

Human Planet joins Sam Niang, a Laotian fisherman, as he walks a high wire strung above the raging Mekong River rapids on an extraordinary commute to work.
Rivers provide the essentials of life: fresh food and water. They often provide natural highways and enable us to live in just about every environment on Earth. But rivers can also flood, freeze or disappear altogether!
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
JohnHurts narrated the visually stunning Human Planet, an awe-inspiring, jaw-dropping, heart-stopping landmark series that marvels at mankind's incredible relationship with nature in the world today.
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbc...

published: 25 Sep 2013

Phetsta - Congo

published: 18 Dec 2009

Diving with Blue Whales | Sri Lanka

Broadcast: 10 April 2011 on Sunday Night, Seven Network, Australia.
They are the largest animals our planet has ever known, their tongues alone weigh more than an elephant, their hearts are the size of a car. Despite all that, we really know very little about the magnificent blue whales. Man has almost hunted them to extinction, but ironically it was Sri Lanka's bitter civil war that gave them sanctuary. Only now that the war is over is the world seeing one of the greatest blue whale colonies ever discovered. Tim was right there alongside these giants.
CREW:
Reporter: Tim Noonan
Producer: Dale Paget
Camera: Jason Wotherspoon
Editor: Jeremy Maher
SUBSCRIBE:
Youtube ► http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=timnoonantv
SOCIALS:
Facebook ► http://facebook.com/timnoonantv
Insta...

published: 14 Jul 2013

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlight...

published: 01 Feb 2018

A Day in the Life of a Welder in the Congo

CBN gets a look into the life of Mbuta, a welder who grew up an orphan in the Congo.

Sewer diving as a dream job in Mexico - vpro Metropolis

In a regular sewer people leave their ‘normal business’, but in Mexico City not so much. Sometimes things like refrigerators, cars and ever dead cows are dumped in the sewer there, which makes the sewer clogged. Fortunately Don Julio is there to save the city from its own poo, as he is the city’s one and only sewer diver. ‘People think I'm crazy, but I love my job. It’s so nice, that filthy water.’
vpro Metropolis was a video project by Dutch broadcast organisation vpro, that ran from 2008 to 2015. Metropolis is made by a global collective of young filmmakers and TV producers, reporting on remarkable stories from their own country/city. We made a trip around the globe on one single issue: from local beauty ideals to Elvis impersonators, to what's it like being gay, or an outcast or a dog ...

published: 23 Oct 2014

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push themselves to the limit to break new records but despite the serious risks involved, they can’t resist the call of the deep.
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195FT SNAKE CAUGHT ON CAMERA - real or fake

In this video we're taking a look at the famous snake that was caught on camera by a decorated military fighter pilot. We uncover new and exclusive info! Also, we have answers to the notorious picture of a little girl with what looks like a spaceman photobombing her. A rice paddy growing 3D art, and one of the strangest little ocean creatures you will ever see!
PEOPLE WHO SUBMITTED THE SNAKE STORY
John MurphyTanvir AhmedNayeem
minhaj kishor
Josip Ćurić
Intyas Ikhsan
Minhajul IslamRavinIbrahimCristian Rodriguez
Valeriano Ricaplaza
Speedy Gonzalez
MORE DESCRIPTION OF GIANT SNAKE STORY
Hey guys Bill here… you know, tall tales about gigantic snakes have been around literally forever.
But the largest snake we have actual physical evidence for is the Titanoboa, an extinct speci...

published: 02 Jun 2017

World Vision travels to The Democratic Republic of Congo part 2

Esperance
"My Husband was Shot in the Head"
Dave Toycen, president of World Vision Canada, travelled to eastern Congo where he met families struggling to thrive in devastating conditions, following a brutal war. One such family shared their story with him and how they overcame tragedy.

St Johns Diving

Record Cave Dive Leaves Mystery | National Geographic

May 3, 2011 — An Australian team has made a record-breaking dive in what may be the world's deepest coldwater cave. But the explorers still haven't reached the end of this New Zealand cave, thought to lead to the mysterious source of the Pearse River.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
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RecordCaveDiveLeaves...

Face-to-Face with a 20-Foot, Monster Anaconda | River Monsters

When Jeremy Wade dives to murky depths hunting a slithery predator, he immediately realizes he could instantly become the hunted. See him come face-to-face with...

When Jeremy Wade dives to murky depths hunting a slithery predator, he immediately realizes he could instantly become the hunted. See him come face-to-face with a massive, terrifying anaconda. | For more River Monsters visit http://animal.discovery.com/tv-shows/river-monsters/#mkcpgn=ytapl1
Catch new episodes of River Monsters Sundays at 9pm E|P on Animal Planet!
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Check out the Animalist App! | http://anmlst.co/1dILpRb

When Jeremy Wade dives to murky depths hunting a slithery predator, he immediately realizes he could instantly become the hunted. See him come face-to-face with a massive, terrifying anaconda. | For more River Monsters visit http://animal.discovery.com/tv-shows/river-monsters/#mkcpgn=ytapl1
Catch new episodes of River Monsters Sundays at 9pm E|P on Animal Planet!
Subscribe to Animal Planet! | http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=animalplanettv
Get full episodes! | http://bit.ly/RiverMonstersFullEps
Join us on Facebook:
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Follow Animal Planet on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/AnimalPlanet
Check out the Animalist App! | http://anmlst.co/1dILpRb

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video p...

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

Scuba Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI

Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI with Low Key Watersports.
I want to note hear what a fantastic job Low Key did for us on these dives. I would highly recommend ...

Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI with Low Key Watersports.
I want to note hear what a fantastic job Low Key did for us on these dives. I would highly recommend this outfit for your diving plans and or other watersporrt activities.
On this dive we saw a huge Ray, a Giant Grouper.

Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI with Low Key Watersports.
I want to note hear what a fantastic job Low Key did for us on these dives. I would highly recommend this outfit for your diving plans and or other watersporrt activities.
On this dive we saw a huge Ray, a Giant Grouper.

BIGGEST Snake EVER (195 Ft.) Analyzed & Confirmed

The Biggest Snake in the World recorded, seen, or filmed is analyzed in depth and confirmed to be around 195 feet in length and could easily eat a man.
IN DEPT...

The Biggest Snake in the World recorded, seen, or filmed is analyzed in depth and confirmed to be around 195 feet in length and could easily eat a man.
IN DEPTH ANALYSIS AND CONFIRMATION
A monstrous snake nearly the size of a football field is captured on film as it rears back to attack a helicopter flying by, but could anything that big really exist? Follow my in depth analysis and by the end of this video try asking yourself that question again.
Humanity is familiar with some pretty big snakes, both in person and in the fossil records, and sometimes through photographic evidence by reliable witnesses.
During World War Two, Belgian fighter ace and squadron leader Remy Van Lierd rose to the rank of Colonel in the British Royal Air Force, and received the Distinguished Flying Cross medal of valor, after shooting down six enemy aircraft and forty four V-1Flying Bombs. After the war he was put in command of the Kamina Air Base, in the Katanga region of what was then The Belgian Congo.
His reputation and spatial recognition abilities are impeccable, which means we must give careful consideration to this incredible report.
One day in Africa in 1959, on the way back to the airbase from a helicopter mission, Colonel Lierd was astounded to see a massive snake winding it's way along the terrain below.
He circled around for a better look and had one of his flight crew take a series of photographs. As he descended to about 500 feet altitude, the gigantic snake took notice, and reared back as though ready to strike at the helicopter if it dared to come within range.
By his own estimate, Colonel Lierd guesses that the snake must have been a minimum of 50 feet in length, with a triangular shaped jaw about two to three feet wide. In his own words, “It could have easily eaten up a man!”
Keep in mind that a reticulated python is the longest snake ever measured alive at 33 feet or 10 meters in length. T he longest measured known extinct snake is the Titanaboa, which was 42 ft or about 13 meters in length.
After “countless reports from the Kamina area of giant snakes”, the original photos were sent to CIACaptainLorenzoW. Burrows, director of the National Photographic Interpretation Center with some further analysis of the photo. Let’s look at that.
Here is the full photo in it’s entirety.
As you can see at the bottom, the type of camera the photo was taken with was recorded, which adds some authenticity to this photo.
The key factor in this photo, as pointed out in the letter, are the termite nests, which is a little confusing at first unless you know what an African termite nest looks like.
They look like this…they’re absolutely huge and they take on recognizable shapes.
The letter reads “Further, the two black spots in the upper left hand quadrant are quite plainly termite nests, or rather, their shadows.
Under high power you can very easily see this, and that the top one is a column, circular in the horizontal section, while the bottom one is typical of the flange types that always point north to south.”
See the termite nests? Now remember how big they are?
Let’s use them, as is done in the letter, to approximate a scale of reference. These termite mounds can easily be 2 and a half times the size of a human. So, we’ll say the top termite nest is 15 feet or about 4.5 meters tall.
This is a bit of a guess, but if the snake was fully stretched out, I’d say it’d be around this long.
So if we just stack our 15 foot or 4.5 meter termite nests next to this line…we get about 13 of them.
This yields a rough approximate total length of about 195 feet or about 60 meters and closely matches what the letter says of about 200 feet.
That’s up to 5 times larger than even the Titanaboa…allegedly the biggest snake ever and that was thought to have gone extinct shortly after the dinosaurs.
What sort of monster did Colonel Remy Van Lierd encounter and photograph here?...and why are there so many other alleged reports of massive snakes by others in the same area?
The Congo seems like a very, very scary place.
Crave more mysteries? Watch our Top 5 BIGGEST AnimalMysteries EVER video if you havn’t already or jump on our mystery playlist and discover how aliens may have saved Earth from a nuclear catastrophe….twice.
CC:
Alpha
Ghedoghedo
RyanQuick

The Biggest Snake in the World recorded, seen, or filmed is analyzed in depth and confirmed to be around 195 feet in length and could easily eat a man.
IN DEPTH ANALYSIS AND CONFIRMATION
A monstrous snake nearly the size of a football field is captured on film as it rears back to attack a helicopter flying by, but could anything that big really exist? Follow my in depth analysis and by the end of this video try asking yourself that question again.
Humanity is familiar with some pretty big snakes, both in person and in the fossil records, and sometimes through photographic evidence by reliable witnesses.
During World War Two, Belgian fighter ace and squadron leader Remy Van Lierd rose to the rank of Colonel in the British Royal Air Force, and received the Distinguished Flying Cross medal of valor, after shooting down six enemy aircraft and forty four V-1Flying Bombs. After the war he was put in command of the Kamina Air Base, in the Katanga region of what was then The Belgian Congo.
His reputation and spatial recognition abilities are impeccable, which means we must give careful consideration to this incredible report.
One day in Africa in 1959, on the way back to the airbase from a helicopter mission, Colonel Lierd was astounded to see a massive snake winding it's way along the terrain below.
He circled around for a better look and had one of his flight crew take a series of photographs. As he descended to about 500 feet altitude, the gigantic snake took notice, and reared back as though ready to strike at the helicopter if it dared to come within range.
By his own estimate, Colonel Lierd guesses that the snake must have been a minimum of 50 feet in length, with a triangular shaped jaw about two to three feet wide. In his own words, “It could have easily eaten up a man!”
Keep in mind that a reticulated python is the longest snake ever measured alive at 33 feet or 10 meters in length. T he longest measured known extinct snake is the Titanaboa, which was 42 ft or about 13 meters in length.
After “countless reports from the Kamina area of giant snakes”, the original photos were sent to CIACaptainLorenzoW. Burrows, director of the National Photographic Interpretation Center with some further analysis of the photo. Let’s look at that.
Here is the full photo in it’s entirety.
As you can see at the bottom, the type of camera the photo was taken with was recorded, which adds some authenticity to this photo.
The key factor in this photo, as pointed out in the letter, are the termite nests, which is a little confusing at first unless you know what an African termite nest looks like.
They look like this…they’re absolutely huge and they take on recognizable shapes.
The letter reads “Further, the two black spots in the upper left hand quadrant are quite plainly termite nests, or rather, their shadows.
Under high power you can very easily see this, and that the top one is a column, circular in the horizontal section, while the bottom one is typical of the flange types that always point north to south.”
See the termite nests? Now remember how big they are?
Let’s use them, as is done in the letter, to approximate a scale of reference. These termite mounds can easily be 2 and a half times the size of a human. So, we’ll say the top termite nest is 15 feet or about 4.5 meters tall.
This is a bit of a guess, but if the snake was fully stretched out, I’d say it’d be around this long.
So if we just stack our 15 foot or 4.5 meter termite nests next to this line…we get about 13 of them.
This yields a rough approximate total length of about 195 feet or about 60 meters and closely matches what the letter says of about 200 feet.
That’s up to 5 times larger than even the Titanaboa…allegedly the biggest snake ever and that was thought to have gone extinct shortly after the dinosaurs.
What sort of monster did Colonel Remy Van Lierd encounter and photograph here?...and why are there so many other alleged reports of massive snakes by others in the same area?
The Congo seems like a very, very scary place.
Crave more mysteries? Watch our Top 5 BIGGEST AnimalMysteries EVER video if you havn’t already or jump on our mystery playlist and discover how aliens may have saved Earth from a nuclear catastrophe….twice.
CC:
Alpha
Ghedoghedo
RyanQuick

World's Most Extreme Fisherman - Human Planet - BBC

Human Planet joins Sam Niang, a Laotian fisherman, as he walks a high wire strung above the raging Mekong River rapids on an extraordinary commute to work.
Ri...

Human Planet joins Sam Niang, a Laotian fisherman, as he walks a high wire strung above the raging Mekong River rapids on an extraordinary commute to work.
Rivers provide the essentials of life: fresh food and water. They often provide natural highways and enable us to live in just about every environment on Earth. But rivers can also flood, freeze or disappear altogether!
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
JohnHurts narrated the visually stunning Human Planet, an awe-inspiring, jaw-dropping, heart-stopping landmark series that marvels at mankind's incredible relationship with nature in the world today.
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

Human Planet joins Sam Niang, a Laotian fisherman, as he walks a high wire strung above the raging Mekong River rapids on an extraordinary commute to work.
Rivers provide the essentials of life: fresh food and water. They often provide natural highways and enable us to live in just about every environment on Earth. But rivers can also flood, freeze or disappear altogether!
Subscribe to BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub
JohnHurts narrated the visually stunning Human Planet, an awe-inspiring, jaw-dropping, heart-stopping landmark series that marvels at mankind's incredible relationship with nature in the world today.
BBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

Broadcast: 10 April 2011 on Sunday Night, Seven Network, Australia.
They are the largest animals our planet has ever known, their tongues alone weigh more than an elephant, their hearts are the size of a car. Despite all that, we really know very little about the magnificent blue whales. Man has almost hunted them to extinction, but ironically it was Sri Lanka's bitter civil war that gave them sanctuary. Only now that the war is over is the world seeing one of the greatest blue whale colonies ever discovered. Tim was right there alongside these giants.
CREW:
Reporter: Tim Noonan
Producer: Dale Paget
Camera: Jason Wotherspoon
Editor: Jeremy Maher
SUBSCRIBE:
Youtube ► http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=timnoonantv
SOCIALS:
Facebook ► http://facebook.com/timnoonantv
Instagram ► http://instagram.com/timnoonantv
Website ► http://www.timnoonan.tv

Broadcast: 10 April 2011 on Sunday Night, Seven Network, Australia.
They are the largest animals our planet has ever known, their tongues alone weigh more than an elephant, their hearts are the size of a car. Despite all that, we really know very little about the magnificent blue whales. Man has almost hunted them to extinction, but ironically it was Sri Lanka's bitter civil war that gave them sanctuary. Only now that the war is over is the world seeing one of the greatest blue whale colonies ever discovered. Tim was right there alongside these giants.
CREW:
Reporter: Tim Noonan
Producer: Dale Paget
Camera: Jason Wotherspoon
Editor: Jeremy Maher
SUBSCRIBE:
Youtube ► http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=timnoonantv
SOCIALS:
Facebook ► http://facebook.com/timnoonantv
Instagram ► http://instagram.com/timnoonantv
Website ► http://www.timnoonan.tv

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlighting how we abuse the drinking water beneath our feet.

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlighting how we abuse the drinking water beneath our feet.

Sewer diving as a dream job in Mexico - vpro Metropolis

In a regular sewer people leave their ‘normal business’, but in Mexico City not so much. Sometimes things like refrigerators, cars and ever dead cows are dumped...

In a regular sewer people leave their ‘normal business’, but in Mexico City not so much. Sometimes things like refrigerators, cars and ever dead cows are dumped in the sewer there, which makes the sewer clogged. Fortunately Don Julio is there to save the city from its own poo, as he is the city’s one and only sewer diver. ‘People think I'm crazy, but I love my job. It’s so nice, that filthy water.’
vpro Metropolis was a video project by Dutch broadcast organisation vpro, that ran from 2008 to 2015. Metropolis is made by a global collective of young filmmakers and TV producers, reporting on remarkable stories from their own country/city. We made a trip around the globe on one single issue: from local beauty ideals to Elvis impersonators, to what's it like being gay, or an outcast or a dog in different cultures.
More videos and full episodes: www.metropolisweb.tv
Visit additional youtube channels bij vpro broadcast:
vpro Broadcast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC75PWWQrls0z6fh0loY5I4Q
vpro Metropolis: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpnazGScKQfGauk7YNyI21w
vpro Documentary: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9sXw4ZdPEIp6bYGvLW-_iA
vpro WorldStories: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqJ6GC0klkbFuQa-0ZePqkQ
vpro Extra: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTLrhK07g6LP-JtT0VVE56A
vpro VG (world music): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-KX3q7zIz7s2rjooBfl6Nw
vpro 3voor12 (alternative music): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-p9faJQsBObRNiKY8QF2NQ
vpro 3voor12 extra (music stories): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtgVYRLGraeL9rGMiM3rBHA

In a regular sewer people leave their ‘normal business’, but in Mexico City not so much. Sometimes things like refrigerators, cars and ever dead cows are dumped in the sewer there, which makes the sewer clogged. Fortunately Don Julio is there to save the city from its own poo, as he is the city’s one and only sewer diver. ‘People think I'm crazy, but I love my job. It’s so nice, that filthy water.’
vpro Metropolis was a video project by Dutch broadcast organisation vpro, that ran from 2008 to 2015. Metropolis is made by a global collective of young filmmakers and TV producers, reporting on remarkable stories from their own country/city. We made a trip around the globe on one single issue: from local beauty ideals to Elvis impersonators, to what's it like being gay, or an outcast or a dog in different cultures.
More videos and full episodes: www.metropolisweb.tv
Visit additional youtube channels bij vpro broadcast:
vpro Broadcast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC75PWWQrls0z6fh0loY5I4Q
vpro Metropolis: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpnazGScKQfGauk7YNyI21w
vpro Documentary: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9sXw4ZdPEIp6bYGvLW-_iA
vpro WorldStories: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqJ6GC0klkbFuQa-0ZePqkQ
vpro Extra: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTLrhK07g6LP-JtT0VVE56A
vpro VG (world music): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-KX3q7zIz7s2rjooBfl6Nw
vpro 3voor12 (alternative music): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-p9faJQsBObRNiKY8QF2NQ
vpro 3voor12 extra (music stories): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtgVYRLGraeL9rGMiM3rBHA

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push...

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push themselves to the limit to break new records but despite the serious risks involved, they can’t resist the call of the deep.
SUBSCRIBE TO RTDChannel to get documentaries firsthand! http://bit.ly/1MgFbVy
FOLLOW US
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Listen to us on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/rttv
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push themselves to the limit to break new records but despite the serious risks involved, they can’t resist the call of the deep.
SUBSCRIBE TO RTDChannel to get documentaries firsthand! http://bit.ly/1MgFbVy
FOLLOW US
RTD WEBSITE: http://RTD.rt.com/
RTD ON TWITTER: http://twitter.com/RT_DOC
RTD ON FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/RTDocumentary
RTD ON DAILYMOTION http://www.dailymotion.com/rt_doc
RTD ON INSTAGRAM http://instagram.com/rt_documentary/
RTD LIVE http://rtd.rt.com/on-air/
RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
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Listen to us on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/rttv
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.

195FT SNAKE CAUGHT ON CAMERA - real or fake

In this video we're taking a look at the famous snake that was caught on camera by a decorated military fighter pilot. We uncover new and exclusive info! Also...

In this video we're taking a look at the famous snake that was caught on camera by a decorated military fighter pilot. We uncover new and exclusive info! Also, we have answers to the notorious picture of a little girl with what looks like a spaceman photobombing her. A rice paddy growing 3D art, and one of the strangest little ocean creatures you will ever see!
PEOPLE WHO SUBMITTED THE SNAKE STORY
John MurphyTanvir AhmedNayeem
minhaj kishor
Josip Ćurić
Intyas Ikhsan
Minhajul IslamRavinIbrahimCristian Rodriguez
Valeriano Ricaplaza
Speedy Gonzalez
MORE DESCRIPTION OF GIANT SNAKE STORY
Hey guys Bill here… you know, tall tales about gigantic snakes have been around literally forever.
But the largest snake we have actual physical evidence for is the Titanoboa, an extinct species of boa constrictor that lived 58 to 60 million years ago. This giant snake reached a length of 42 feet, or 12.8 meters, and probably weighed 2500 pounds, or 1,135 kilograms.
The biggest snakes alive today are the Anaconda from South America and Reticulated Python from Southeast Asia.
The largest anaconda ever measured was almost 28 feet, or about 8 and a half meters long. She wasn't weighed at the time she was caught, but scientists estimate she must have weighed over 500 lbs, or 227 kilograms.
Although the Anaconda is the largest snake in terms of body mass, the Asiatic Reticulated Python holds the world record for the length of a snake. The longest one ever measured came in at about 33 feet, or just over 10 meters.
Coming face to face with a 30-foot anaconda or reticulated python would have to be one of the scariest things you could possibly imagine. But what about a snake over SIX TIMES that size?? That is exactly what Belgian ace pilot Remy Van Lierde may have experienced when he shot this mysterious photo while helicoptering over the Congol ese jungle in 1959.
METADATA
Some helpful words for finding this video later. I use this when I get a submission for a topic that I have already covered but forgotten which video it is in.
Solway Firth Spaceman.
rice paddy
Naruto
pygmy seahorse
spaceman photobombs girl
congo snake
195 FootSnakeKaren Dewhirst
Creative Discovery Museum

In this video we're taking a look at the famous snake that was caught on camera by a decorated military fighter pilot. We uncover new and exclusive info! Also, we have answers to the notorious picture of a little girl with what looks like a spaceman photobombing her. A rice paddy growing 3D art, and one of the strangest little ocean creatures you will ever see!
PEOPLE WHO SUBMITTED THE SNAKE STORY
John MurphyTanvir AhmedNayeem
minhaj kishor
Josip Ćurić
Intyas Ikhsan
Minhajul IslamRavinIbrahimCristian Rodriguez
Valeriano Ricaplaza
Speedy Gonzalez
MORE DESCRIPTION OF GIANT SNAKE STORY
Hey guys Bill here… you know, tall tales about gigantic snakes have been around literally forever.
But the largest snake we have actual physical evidence for is the Titanoboa, an extinct species of boa constrictor that lived 58 to 60 million years ago. This giant snake reached a length of 42 feet, or 12.8 meters, and probably weighed 2500 pounds, or 1,135 kilograms.
The biggest snakes alive today are the Anaconda from South America and Reticulated Python from Southeast Asia.
The largest anaconda ever measured was almost 28 feet, or about 8 and a half meters long. She wasn't weighed at the time she was caught, but scientists estimate she must have weighed over 500 lbs, or 227 kilograms.
Although the Anaconda is the largest snake in terms of body mass, the Asiatic Reticulated Python holds the world record for the length of a snake. The longest one ever measured came in at about 33 feet, or just over 10 meters.
Coming face to face with a 30-foot anaconda or reticulated python would have to be one of the scariest things you could possibly imagine. But what about a snake over SIX TIMES that size?? That is exactly what Belgian ace pilot Remy Van Lierde may have experienced when he shot this mysterious photo while helicoptering over the Congol ese jungle in 1959.
METADATA
Some helpful words for finding this video later. I use this when I get a submission for a topic that I have already covered but forgotten which video it is in.
Solway Firth Spaceman.
rice paddy
Naruto
pygmy seahorse
spaceman photobombs girl
congo snake
195 FootSnakeKaren Dewhirst
Creative Discovery Museum

Esperance
"My Husband was Shot in the Head"
Dave Toycen, president of World Vision Canada, travelled to eastern Congo where he met families struggling to thrive in devastating conditions, following a brutal war. One such family shared their story with him and how they overcame tragedy.

Esperance
"My Husband was Shot in the Head"
Dave Toycen, president of World Vision Canada, travelled to eastern Congo where he met families struggling to thrive in devastating conditions, following a brutal war. One such family shared their story with him and how they overcame tragedy.

Record Cave Dive Leaves Mystery | National Geographic

May 3, 2011 — An Australian team has made a record-breaking dive in what may be the world's deepest coldwater cave. But the explorers still haven't reached the ...

May 3, 2011 — An Australian team has made a record-breaking dive in what may be the world's deepest coldwater cave. But the explorers still haven't reached the end of this New Zealand cave, thought to lead to the mysterious source of the Pearse River.
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RecordCaveDiveLeavesMystery | National Geographic
https://youtu.be/Om1P8dE6zm4
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

May 3, 2011 — An Australian team has made a record-breaking dive in what may be the world's deepest coldwater cave. But the explorers still haven't reached the end of this New Zealand cave, thought to lead to the mysterious source of the Pearse River.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
RecordCaveDiveLeavesMystery | National Geographic
https://youtu.be/Om1P8dE6zm4
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

published: 05 Jul 2014

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlight...

published: 01 Feb 2018

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push themselves to the limit to break new records but despite the serious risks involved, they can’t resist the call of the deep.
SUBSCRIBE TO RTDChannel to get documentaries firsthand! http://bit.ly/1MgFbVy
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published: 08 May 2016

Let's Play Doom 2 P12 Diving into the Spirit World through the Monster Congo

published: 10 Jan 2012

Searching for Dinosaurs

Underwater diving

Underwater diving is the practice of going underwater, either with breathing apparatus or by breath-holding .Atmospheric diving suits may be used to isolate the diver from the effects of high ambient pressure, or the saturation diving technique can be used to reduce the risk of decompression sickness after deep dives.Diving activities are restricted to relatively shallow depths, as even armored atmospheric diving suits are unable to withstand the pressures of the deeper waters of the world.Diving is also restricted to conditions which are not excessively hazardous, though the level of risk acceptable to the diver can vary considerably.
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
About the author(s): MC2Kevin B. GrayLicense: Public domain
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
This channel is de...

published: 25 Sep 2016

Kenya's Sewage Problem

The LastTaboo: In Kenya 6 million people still defecate in the open. This report literally cuts through the crap to take a funny and refreshing look at the serious risks and the bold new tactics being used to tackle them.
For similar stories, see:
The Unreliable KenyanRailroadSystem
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJAt4vaaSLw
Al Qaeda's FirstEverAttack: NairobiEmbassy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTDE8KzGjG8
Inside Kenya's PhenomenalProduction of Long-Distance Runners
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QApyq4bops
Subscribe to journeyman for daily uploads:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=journeymanpictures
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/film/5720/the-last-taboo-hd
Follow us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/journeymanp...

Jeremy Wade's Life in Angling

Big, scary and dangerous. No, we're not talking about Jeremy Wade - but the fish he catches in his worldwide hit TV seriesRiver Monsters. Here, we catch up with the teacher turned global star for the latest in our My Life in Angling interviews...
---
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Like Angling Times on Facebook
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published: 07 May 2013

FERRE GOLA ET ESPOIR LEADER EN DANGER AU PARQUET BOLANDA

published: 05 Mar 2017

Cristina Zenato: Cave Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life.
Cristina speaks five languages, Italian, English, German, French and Spanish. She is quite a talented lady. When Cristina is not working, she can usually be found free-diving or exploring new cave systems. She is the first woman to have connected a fresh water inland cave with a salt-water ocean system. It's very important to study these cave systems as most of the freshwater on Earth is found below the ground. Many people rely on groundwater as a drinking water source, and our acti...

Loango: campo petrolifero a largo delle coste congolesi

National Geographic - CIAConfidential: 9/11MastermindDocumentary 2017
Follow the dramatic story of the CIA's quest to find and capture this once-shadowy figure, piecing together fragments of intelligence. national geographic,nat geo,natgeo,animals,wildlife,science,explore,discover,survival,nature,documentary,frogfish,indonesia,ocean,walking,diver,seafloor,appendages,legs,pectoral fins,lure,anglerfish,prey
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#nationalgeographic, #natgeo

Scuba Dive @ Greece 12-2-2012 [raw footage]

Gas dive burning

published: 27 Aug 2013

Golden Gamble. Gold mining in the Philippines, a dirty business

More films about the Philippines: https://rtd.rt.com/tags/philippines/
- The use of child labour in the Philippine’s Paracale, or ‘Goldtown’, is widespread
- Extracting gold involves diving into mud-filled shafts and using toxic mercury
- Poverty and lack of alternative jobs force people into this highly dangerous work
- Many die young due to work accidents or breathing problems, others develop chronic illness
The Philippines’ town of Paracale was dubbed “Goldtown” for its rich deposits of the precious metal. Despite government attempts to regulate mining, illegal pits are still commonplace. They lack even the most basic health and safety and workers are exposed to toxic mercury fumes. Dirty water causes skin diseases and they live with the constant threat of being buried alive. Workers...

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video p...

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlighting how we abuse the drinking water beneath our feet.

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlighting how we abuse the drinking water beneath our feet.

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push...

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push themselves to the limit to break new records but despite the serious risks involved, they can’t resist the call of the deep.
SUBSCRIBE TO RTDChannel to get documentaries firsthand! http://bit.ly/1MgFbVy
FOLLOW US
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Listen to us on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/rttv
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push themselves to the limit to break new records but despite the serious risks involved, they can’t resist the call of the deep.
SUBSCRIBE TO RTDChannel to get documentaries firsthand! http://bit.ly/1MgFbVy
FOLLOW US
RTD WEBSITE: http://RTD.rt.com/
RTD ON TWITTER: http://twitter.com/RT_DOC
RTD ON FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/RTDocumentary
RTD ON DAILYMOTION http://www.dailymotion.com/rt_doc
RTD ON INSTAGRAM http://instagram.com/rt_documentary/
RTD LIVE http://rtd.rt.com/on-air/
RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
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Listen to us on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/rttv
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.

published:08 May 2016

views:20406

back

Let's Play Doom 2 P12 Diving into the Spirit World through the Monster Congo

Underwater diving is the practice of going underwater, either with breathing apparatus or by breath-holding .Atmospheric diving suits may be used to isolate the diver from the effects of high ambient pressure, or the saturation diving technique can be used to reduce the risk of decompression sickness after deep dives.Diving activities are restricted to relatively shallow depths, as even armored atmospheric diving suits are unable to withstand the pressures of the deeper waters of the world.Diving is also restricted to conditions which are not excessively hazardous, though the level of risk acceptable to the diver can vary considerably.
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
About the author(s): MC2Kevin B. GrayLicense: Public domain
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
This channel is dedicated to make Wikipedia, one of the biggest knowledge databases in the world available to people with limited vision.
Article available under a Creative Commons licenseImage source in video

Underwater diving is the practice of going underwater, either with breathing apparatus or by breath-holding .Atmospheric diving suits may be used to isolate the diver from the effects of high ambient pressure, or the saturation diving technique can be used to reduce the risk of decompression sickness after deep dives.Diving activities are restricted to relatively shallow depths, as even armored atmospheric diving suits are unable to withstand the pressures of the deeper waters of the world.Diving is also restricted to conditions which are not excessively hazardous, though the level of risk acceptable to the diver can vary considerably.
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
About the author(s): MC2Kevin B. GrayLicense: Public domain
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
This channel is dedicated to make Wikipedia, one of the biggest knowledge databases in the world available to people with limited vision.
Article available under a Creative Commons licenseImage source in video

Kenya's Sewage Problem

The LastTaboo: In Kenya 6 million people still defecate in the open. This report literally cuts through the crap to take a funny and refreshing look at the ser...

The LastTaboo: In Kenya 6 million people still defecate in the open. This report literally cuts through the crap to take a funny and refreshing look at the serious risks and the bold new tactics being used to tackle them.
For similar stories, see:
The Unreliable KenyanRailroadSystem
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJAt4vaaSLw
Al Qaeda's FirstEverAttack: NairobiEmbassy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTDE8KzGjG8
Inside Kenya's PhenomenalProduction of Long-Distance Runners
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QApyq4bops
Subscribe to journeyman for daily uploads:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=journeymanpictures
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/film/5720/the-last-taboo-hd
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"Shit is very dangerous to people's health", as MargaretKahiga simply puts it. She is part of the new, no-nonsense approach to improving Kenya's sanitation. Faeces contamination kills one child every 20 seconds - more than Aids and malaria combined. But when it comes to poo, there is a shared sense of "fear, disgust and shame" within local Kenyan communities. ChiefCharro is forcing his community to confront the health risks through shock tactics - collecting fresh faeces and placing them directly next to fresh bread, then asking people to eat the bread. It may seem crude, but in areas where over 5,000 people share a single toilet, tackling the taboo is literally a matter of life and death.
Kate Iles – Ref. 5720
JourneymanPictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

The LastTaboo: In Kenya 6 million people still defecate in the open. This report literally cuts through the crap to take a funny and refreshing look at the serious risks and the bold new tactics being used to tackle them.
For similar stories, see:
The Unreliable KenyanRailroadSystem
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJAt4vaaSLw
Al Qaeda's FirstEverAttack: NairobiEmbassy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTDE8KzGjG8
Inside Kenya's PhenomenalProduction of Long-Distance Runners
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QApyq4bops
Subscribe to journeyman for daily uploads:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=journeymanpictures
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/film/5720/the-last-taboo-hd
Follow us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/journeymanpictures
Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/JourneymanVOD
https://twitter.com/JourneymanNews
Follow us on Instagram:
https://instagram.com/journeymanpictures
"Shit is very dangerous to people's health", as MargaretKahiga simply puts it. She is part of the new, no-nonsense approach to improving Kenya's sanitation. Faeces contamination kills one child every 20 seconds - more than Aids and malaria combined. But when it comes to poo, there is a shared sense of "fear, disgust and shame" within local Kenyan communities. ChiefCharro is forcing his community to confront the health risks through shock tactics - collecting fresh faeces and placing them directly next to fresh bread, then asking people to eat the bread. It may seem crude, but in areas where over 5,000 people share a single toilet, tackling the taboo is literally a matter of life and death.
Kate Iles – Ref. 5720
JourneymanPictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

Big, scary and dangerous. No, we're not talking about Jeremy Wade - but the fish he catches in his worldwide hit TV seriesRiver Monsters. Here, we catch up with the teacher turned global star for the latest in our My Life in Angling interviews...
---
Subscribe to us and keep up with the hottest tactics, gear reviews and features
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=GoFishingOnline
Like Angling Times on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/anglingtimes
Follow Angling Times on Twitter
https://twitter.com/angling_times
https://twitter.com/anglingtimesed

Big, scary and dangerous. No, we're not talking about Jeremy Wade - but the fish he catches in his worldwide hit TV seriesRiver Monsters. Here, we catch up with the teacher turned global star for the latest in our My Life in Angling interviews...
---
Subscribe to us and keep up with the hottest tactics, gear reviews and features
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=GoFishingOnline
Like Angling Times on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/anglingtimes
Follow Angling Times on Twitter
https://twitter.com/angling_times
https://twitter.com/anglingtimesed

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life.
Cristina speaks five languages, Italian, English, German, French and Spanish. She is quite a talented lady. When Cristina is not working, she can usually be found free-diving or exploring new cave systems. She is the first woman to have connected a fresh water inland cave with a salt-water ocean system. It's very important to study these cave systems as most of the freshwater on Earth is found below the ground. Many people rely on groundwater as a drinking water source, and our activities on the surface affect this precious resource.
Students will be amazed when Cristina shows them the difference between diving in a cave system below a protected National Park and diving in the same cave system under areas of human development.
Naturally, all this talent sparked up the attention of filmmakers, documentary and TV producers worldwide. She has been featured on BBC, Discovery, Nat Geo, ABC and science and nature programs all over Europe, Asia and the United States.
GradeLevel: Grade 2 and up
Duration: Approx. 45 minutes

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life.
Cristina speaks five languages, Italian, English, German, French and Spanish. She is quite a talented lady. When Cristina is not working, she can usually be found free-diving or exploring new cave systems. She is the first woman to have connected a fresh water inland cave with a salt-water ocean system. It's very important to study these cave systems as most of the freshwater on Earth is found below the ground. Many people rely on groundwater as a drinking water source, and our activities on the surface affect this precious resource.
Students will be amazed when Cristina shows them the difference between diving in a cave system below a protected National Park and diving in the same cave system under areas of human development.
Naturally, all this talent sparked up the attention of filmmakers, documentary and TV producers worldwide. She has been featured on BBC, Discovery, Nat Geo, ABC and science and nature programs all over Europe, Asia and the United States.
GradeLevel: Grade 2 and up
Duration: Approx. 45 minutes

National Geographic - CIAConfidential: 9/11MastermindDocumentary 2017
Follow the dramatic story of the CIA's quest to find and capture this once-shadowy figure, piecing together fragments of intelligence. national geographic,nat geo,natgeo,animals,wildlife,science,explore,discover,survival,nature,documentary,frogfish,indonesia,ocean,walking,diver,seafloor,appendages,legs,pectoral fins,lure,anglerfish,prey
Subscribe & More Videos: https://goo.gl/9afFdp
Thank for watching, Please Like Share And SUBSCRIBE!!!
#nationalgeographic, #natgeo

National Geographic - CIAConfidential: 9/11MastermindDocumentary 2017
Follow the dramatic story of the CIA's quest to find and capture this once-shadowy figure, piecing together fragments of intelligence. national geographic,nat geo,natgeo,animals,wildlife,science,explore,discover,survival,nature,documentary,frogfish,indonesia,ocean,walking,diver,seafloor,appendages,legs,pectoral fins,lure,anglerfish,prey
Subscribe & More Videos: https://goo.gl/9afFdp
Thank for watching, Please Like Share And SUBSCRIBE!!!
#nationalgeographic, #natgeo

Golden Gamble. Gold mining in the Philippines, a dirty business

More films about the Philippines: https://rtd.rt.com/tags/philippines/
- The use of child labour in the Philippine’s Paracale, or ‘Goldtown’, is widespread
- E...

More films about the Philippines: https://rtd.rt.com/tags/philippines/
- The use of child labour in the Philippine’s Paracale, or ‘Goldtown’, is widespread
- Extracting gold involves diving into mud-filled shafts and using toxic mercury
- Poverty and lack of alternative jobs force people into this highly dangerous work
- Many die young due to work accidents or breathing problems, others develop chronic illness
The Philippines’ town of Paracale was dubbed “Goldtown” for its rich deposits of the precious metal. Despite government attempts to regulate mining, illegal pits are still commonplace. They lack even the most basic health and safety and workers are exposed to toxic mercury fumes. Dirty water causes skin diseases and they live with the constant threat of being buried alive. Workers continue to take these risks day after day, because there is no other source of income. Many of the gold miners are children whose families can’t afford to send them to school.
Some gold is panned on the surface, but a lot has to be extracted from underground. To do that, prospectors dive into narrow, mud-filled shafts, uses snorkelling masks and long tubes too breathe. If the mine collapses, they have no chance of escape. They have a saying here, ‘while you’re down the mine, you have one foot in the grave’. Several miners have already died that way, others from respiratory diseases caused by inhaling mercury fumes. The toxic metal is used in gold extraction with no safety precautions, so it poisons the air, the ground and the water, causing long-term harm to the whole community.
Another danger to the inhabitants of Paracale comes from disused mines, abandoned and left open, waiting for unsuspecting victims to fall in. The business takes its toll on workers, their families and the community. They have been known to demonstrate, demanding safer working conditions, better pay and other job opportunities, but change is slow. Meanwhile, extreme poverty among people who produce one of the world’s most precious metals leaves them no option but to continue with this pitiless occupation.
SUBSCRIBE TO RTDChannel to get documentaries firsthand! http://bit.ly/1MgFbVy
FOLLOW US
RTD WEBSITE: https://RTD.rt.com/
RTD ON TWITTER: http://twitter.com/RT_DOC
RTD ON FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/RTDocumentary
RTD ON DAILYMOTION http://www.dailymotion.com/rt_doc
RTD ON INSTAGRAM https://www.instagram.com/rtd_documentary_channel/
RTD LIVE https://rtd.rt.com/on-air/

More films about the Philippines: https://rtd.rt.com/tags/philippines/
- The use of child labour in the Philippine’s Paracale, or ‘Goldtown’, is widespread
- Extracting gold involves diving into mud-filled shafts and using toxic mercury
- Poverty and lack of alternative jobs force people into this highly dangerous work
- Many die young due to work accidents or breathing problems, others develop chronic illness
The Philippines’ town of Paracale was dubbed “Goldtown” for its rich deposits of the precious metal. Despite government attempts to regulate mining, illegal pits are still commonplace. They lack even the most basic health and safety and workers are exposed to toxic mercury fumes. Dirty water causes skin diseases and they live with the constant threat of being buried alive. Workers continue to take these risks day after day, because there is no other source of income. Many of the gold miners are children whose families can’t afford to send them to school.
Some gold is panned on the surface, but a lot has to be extracted from underground. To do that, prospectors dive into narrow, mud-filled shafts, uses snorkelling masks and long tubes too breathe. If the mine collapses, they have no chance of escape. They have a saying here, ‘while you’re down the mine, you have one foot in the grave’. Several miners have already died that way, others from respiratory diseases caused by inhaling mercury fumes. The toxic metal is used in gold extraction with no safety precautions, so it poisons the air, the ground and the water, causing long-term harm to the whole community.
Another danger to the inhabitants of Paracale comes from disused mines, abandoned and left open, waiting for unsuspecting victims to fall in. The business takes its toll on workers, their families and the community. They have been known to demonstrate, demanding safer working conditions, better pay and other job opportunities, but change is slow. Meanwhile, extreme poverty among people who produce one of the world’s most precious metals leaves them no option but to continue with this pitiless occupation.
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Face-to-Face with a 20-Foot, Monster Anaconda | River Monsters

When Jeremy Wade dives to murky depths hunting a slithery predator, he immediately realizes he could instantly become the hunted. See him come face-to-face with a massive, terrifying anaconda. | For more River Monsters visit http://animal.discovery.com/tv-shows/river-monsters/#mkcpgn=ytapl1
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44:17

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of S...

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

8:21

Scuba Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI

Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI with Low Key Watersports.
I want to note hear what a fant...

Scuba Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI

Diving @ Congo Cay St. John USVI with Low Key Watersports.
I want to note hear what a fantastic job Low Key did for us on these dives. I would highly recommend this outfit for your diving plans and or other watersporrt activities.
On this dive we saw a huge Ray, a Giant Grouper.

BIGGEST Snake EVER (195 Ft.) Analyzed & Confirmed

The Biggest Snake in the World recorded, seen, or filmed is analyzed in depth and confirmed to be around 195 feet in length and could easily eat a man.
IN DEPTH ANALYSIS AND CONFIRMATION
A monstrous snake nearly the size of a football field is captured on film as it rears back to attack a helicopter flying by, but could anything that big really exist? Follow my in depth analysis and by the end of this video try asking yourself that question again.
Humanity is familiar with some pretty big snakes, both in person and in the fossil records, and sometimes through photographic evidence by reliable witnesses.
During World War Two, Belgian fighter ace and squadron leader Remy Van Lierd rose to the rank of Colonel in the British Royal Air Force, and received the Distinguished Flying Cross medal of valor, after shooting down six enemy aircraft and forty four V-1Flying Bombs. After the war he was put in command of the Kamina Air Base, in the Katanga region of what was then The Belgian Congo.
His reputation and spatial recognition abilities are impeccable, which means we must give careful consideration to this incredible report.
One day in Africa in 1959, on the way back to the airbase from a helicopter mission, Colonel Lierd was astounded to see a massive snake winding it's way along the terrain below.
He circled around for a better look and had one of his flight crew take a series of photographs. As he descended to about 500 feet altitude, the gigantic snake took notice, and reared back as though ready to strike at the helicopter if it dared to come within range.
By his own estimate, Colonel Lierd guesses that the snake must have been a minimum of 50 feet in length, with a triangular shaped jaw about two to three feet wide. In his own words, “It could have easily eaten up a man!”
Keep in mind that a reticulated python is the longest snake ever measured alive at 33 feet or 10 meters in length. T he longest measured known extinct snake is the Titanaboa, which was 42 ft or about 13 meters in length.
After “countless reports from the Kamina area of giant snakes”, the original photos were sent to CIACaptainLorenzoW. Burrows, director of the National Photographic Interpretation Center with some further analysis of the photo. Let’s look at that.
Here is the full photo in it’s entirety.
As you can see at the bottom, the type of camera the photo was taken with was recorded, which adds some authenticity to this photo.
The key factor in this photo, as pointed out in the letter, are the termite nests, which is a little confusing at first unless you know what an African termite nest looks like.
They look like this…they’re absolutely huge and they take on recognizable shapes.
The letter reads “Further, the two black spots in the upper left hand quadrant are quite plainly termite nests, or rather, their shadows.
Under high power you can very easily see this, and that the top one is a column, circular in the horizontal section, while the bottom one is typical of the flange types that always point north to south.”
See the termite nests? Now remember how big they are?
Let’s use them, as is done in the letter, to approximate a scale of reference. These termite mounds can easily be 2 and a half times the size of a human. So, we’ll say the top termite nest is 15 feet or about 4.5 meters tall.
This is a bit of a guess, but if the snake was fully stretched out, I’d say it’d be around this long.
So if we just stack our 15 foot or 4.5 meter termite nests next to this line…we get about 13 of them.
This yields a rough approximate total length of about 195 feet or about 60 meters and closely matches what the letter says of about 200 feet.
That’s up to 5 times larger than even the Titanaboa…allegedly the biggest snake ever and that was thought to have gone extinct shortly after the dinosaurs.
What sort of monster did Colonel Remy Van Lierd encounter and photograph here?...and why are there so many other alleged reports of massive snakes by others in the same area?
The Congo seems like a very, very scary place.
Crave more mysteries? Watch our Top 5 BIGGEST AnimalMysteries EVER video if you havn’t already or jump on our mystery playlist and discover how aliens may have saved Earth from a nuclear catastrophe….twice.
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0:21

A Visit To The Underwater Dentist

Thanks for watching my video, I filmed myself while diving in the Red Sea with these Clean...

World's Most Extreme Fisherman - Human Planet - BBC

Human Planet joins Sam Niang, a Laotian fisherman, as he walks a high wire strung above the raging Mekong River rapids on an extraordinary commute to work.
Rivers provide the essentials of life: fresh food and water. They often provide natural highways and enable us to live in just about every environment on Earth. But rivers can also flood, freeze or disappear altogether!
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Diving with Blue Whales | Sri Lanka

Broadcast: 10 April 2011 on Sunday Night, Seven Network, Australia.
They are the largest animals our planet has ever known, their tongues alone weigh more than an elephant, their hearts are the size of a car. Despite all that, we really know very little about the magnificent blue whales. Man has almost hunted them to extinction, but ironically it was Sri Lanka's bitter civil war that gave them sanctuary. Only now that the war is over is the world seeing one of the greatest blue whale colonies ever discovered. Tim was right there alongside these giants.
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Camera: Jason Wotherspoon
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55:35

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a p...

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlighting how we abuse the drinking water beneath our feet.

5:16

A Day in the Life of a Welder in the Congo

CBN gets a look into the life of Mbuta, a welder who grew up an orphan in the Congo.

SCUBA Diving on St. Thomas: Congo - June 18, 2014

My 13th dive overall and first dive using a GoPro. The dive site is "Congo" just off of St. Thomas, USVI. It's actually a very cool dive site, but the video probably doesn't do it justice. My fault. Obviously I have more work to do on my buoyancy control and my camera work, but this was a fun dive and I am happy to share.

55:35

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a p...

Cristian Zenato | Cave and Shark Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life. Cristina is world renowned for her work with sharks in the wild. She is said to have a natural gift with sharks. Her ability to work with several types of sharks has allowed her to study sharks up close with no stress for the animals. She has developed a Caribbean Reef SharkAwareness Distinctive Specialty and was the initiator of a campaign that resulted in the complete protection for all species of sharks in the entire Bahamas. Cristina is also a highly skilled cave diver, highlighting how we abuse the drinking water beneath our feet.

27:48

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing....

Dying to Dive (RT Documentary)

They can hold their breath for several minutes and slow their heartrate to almost nothing. Free divers plunge to incredible depths with no scuba gear. They push themselves to the limit to break new records but despite the serious risks involved, they can’t resist the call of the deep.
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34:31

Let's Play Doom 2 P12 Diving into the Spirit World through the Monster Congo

Underwater diving

Underwater diving is the practice of going underwater, either with breathing apparatus or by breath-holding .Atmospheric diving suits may be used to isolate the diver from the effects of high ambient pressure, or the saturation diving technique can be used to reduce the risk of decompression sickness after deep dives.Diving activities are restricted to relatively shallow depths, as even armored atmospheric diving suits are unable to withstand the pressures of the deeper waters of the world.Diving is also restricted to conditions which are not excessively hazardous, though the level of risk acceptable to the diver can vary considerably.
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About the author(s): MC2Kevin B. GrayLicense: Public domain
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Article available under a Creative Commons licenseImage source in video

24:20

Kenya's Sewage Problem

The Last Taboo: In Kenya 6 million people still defecate in the open. This report literall...

Kenya's Sewage Problem

The LastTaboo: In Kenya 6 million people still defecate in the open. This report literally cuts through the crap to take a funny and refreshing look at the serious risks and the bold new tactics being used to tackle them.
For similar stories, see:
The Unreliable KenyanRailroadSystem
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJAt4vaaSLw
Al Qaeda's FirstEverAttack: NairobiEmbassy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTDE8KzGjG8
Inside Kenya's PhenomenalProduction of Long-Distance Runners
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QApyq4bops
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"Shit is very dangerous to people's health", as MargaretKahiga simply puts it. She is part of the new, no-nonsense approach to improving Kenya's sanitation. Faeces contamination kills one child every 20 seconds - more than Aids and malaria combined. But when it comes to poo, there is a shared sense of "fear, disgust and shame" within local Kenyan communities. ChiefCharro is forcing his community to confront the health risks through shock tactics - collecting fresh faeces and placing them directly next to fresh bread, then asking people to eat the bread. It may seem crude, but in areas where over 5,000 people share a single toilet, tackling the taboo is literally a matter of life and death.
Kate Iles – Ref. 5720
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Jeremy Wade's Life in Angling

Big, scary and dangerous. No, we're not talking about Jeremy Wade - but the fish he catches in his worldwide hit TV seriesRiver Monsters. Here, we catch up with the teacher turned global star for the latest in our My Life in Angling interviews...
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Cristina Zenato: Cave Diver

Born in Italy, Cristina grew up in the rain forests of the African Congo and developed a passion for the outdoors. Coming from a family “of the sea” Cristina developed a love for the water at a very young age and she journeyed to the Bahamas to learn to dive. She made the Bahamas her home and diving her life.
Cristina speaks five languages, Italian, English, German, French and Spanish. She is quite a talented lady. When Cristina is not working, she can usually be found free-diving or exploring new cave systems. She is the first woman to have connected a fresh water inland cave with a salt-water ocean system. It's very important to study these cave systems as most of the freshwater on Earth is found below the ground. Many people rely on groundwater as a drinking water source, and our activities on the surface affect this precious resource.
Students will be amazed when Cristina shows them the difference between diving in a cave system below a protected National Park and diving in the same cave system under areas of human development.
Naturally, all this talent sparked up the attention of filmmakers, documentary and TV producers worldwide. She has been featured on BBC, Discovery, Nat Geo, ABC and science and nature programs all over Europe, Asia and the United States.
GradeLevel: Grade 2 and up
Duration: Approx. 45 minutes

Gizmodo reported on Wednesday that a former Google engineer is suing the company for discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and wrongful termination ...Chevalier's posts had been quoting in Damore's lawsuit against Google, who is also suing the company for alleged discrimination against conservative white men ... “Firing the employee who pushed back against the bullies was exactly the wrong step to take.” ... But the effect is the same....

OSLO. Sea levels will rise between 0.7 and 1.2 metres in the next two centuries even if governments end the fossil fuel era as promised under the Paris climate agreement, scientists said on Tuesday ...Ocean levels will rise inexorably because heat-trapping industrial gases already em­­itted will linger in the atmosphere, melting more ice, it said. In addition, water naturally expands as it warms above four degrees Celsius (39.2F) ... ....

The woman tasked with caring for accused Florida shooter Nikolas Cruz and his brother have moved quickly to file court papers seeking control of their inheritance the day after the massacre at Majory Stoneman Douglas High School, Newsweek reported. When the mother of Nikolas and Zachary Cruz died from flu-related pneumonia last November, their lives were entrusted to Roxanne Deschamps, the report said....

Special CounselRobert Mueller's probe is prepared to accept a guilty plea from the London-based son-in-law of a Russian businessman after he made false statements during the investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, according to the Washington Post... Tymoshenko was later imprisoned by former president Viktor Yanukovych after signing a controversial deal with Russia for natural gas ... U.S ... U.S....

Article by WN.Com Correspondent Dallas DarlingTo this day it’s something my aunt hardly mentions, let alone discusses. And like a few other families living in the United States, it’s taboo and completely off limits ... Neither was it as widespread, since Japan had nearly conquered most of East Asia including parts of China. But still, U.S ... authorities continued the comfort station system absent formal slavery ... The U.S ... military authorities ... ....

In global markets the price of cobalt, a mineral used in batteries for high-tech products from iPhones to Tesla electric cars, has nearly tripled to $81,500 a tonne in two years. But in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which produced two-thirds o ... ....

(credit. CBS). By Dominic Garcia. DENVER (CBS4) – Applying for college can be a daunting task, but for students in Denver Public Schools there is a valuable resource to help them each step of the way. (credit. CBS) ... It aims to inspire them to apply to college and helps them through the process ... “My parents are from CongoKinshasa, and they came to America to see my sister and I get these opportunities,” she told CBS4’s Dominic Garcia....

Mouloudia Alger of Algeria scored nine, Zesco United of Zambia seven and Esperance of Tunisia five in CAF Champions League goal sprees on Wednesday as they booked last-32 places ... Mouloudia turned around a 2-0 first-leg loss to newcomers Otoho in CongoBrazzaville by winning 9-0 after leading by three goals at halftime ... That left the hosts needing at least five goals to survive and all they could manage was a hollow 2-1 victory. ....

Valentine's Day was the backdrop for a William Blair seminar on the outlook for philanthropy with a focus on the challenges of engaging family members in making decisions about giving ...Nearly100 of the firm's clients attended the event ... Investing in activities that can help bind a community even in the smallest ways can have a profound impact, said Coney, who a few years ago helped revive Chicago's CongoSquareTheatre ... (noodl....

Africa has never had it so good politically. Democracy appears finally to be working and African strongmen are not as secure as they once were ... Of course, the circumstances that led to their departure differ ... It is not yet Uhuru as dictators and sit tight leaders continue to hold sway in Rwanda, Burundi, Congo DR, Equatorial Guinea, Cameroun, Togo while political decay and authoritarianism appears to be setting-in in Kenya and Nigeria ... ....